La bohème

2014Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House

Gale Edwards’ lavish production inhabits 1930s Berlin, a hub for
young impoverished creatives contending with the high cost of round-the-clock hedonism
in a city seething with glitzy excess.

Berlin, midwinter, 1934.

A painter, a musician, a philosopher and a poet
are having a night on the town. Café Momus is too pricey for them – they’ve
nothing to weigh down those moth-eaten pockets. But why worry? The landlord is sorted,
the bar tab can wait. They’re young and their lofty ideals will keep body and
soul together.

And then there’s love. Ah, love. That tingle
of electricity as two hands meet. The fire in the eyes of the girl you want so badly.
Love will keep us warm, won’t it? Find out, when Puccini’s bohemian boys
wake up.

Puccini’s penniless dreamers are the very picture
of the original starving artist...

Back then, there were no arts councils, no grants, no HECS: Puccini’s penniless
dreamers are the very picture of the original starving artist. But why do we glamorise
this hand-to-mouth way of life?

Choosing the quill or the canvas over stability and respectability; renouncing
all but a little daily bread to nourish the creative essence that burns within us?
It certainly has a whiff of noble sacrifice about it, enduring hardship in the service
of inspiration.

Gale Edwards’ lavish production brings the garret dwellers to 1930s Berlin,
a hub for young impoverished creatives contending with the high cost of round-the-clock
hedonism in a city seething with glitzy excess.

Little do they know that their art is bearing witness to the end of an era, and
when that decadent bubble bursts they’ll have to step into the real world.

Until then, it helps to have friends like Rodolfo, Marcello, Schaunard and Colline
to keep the cheap wine and inspiration flowing.